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Macros |
Open subroutines, often used to create new commands. |
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Majuscule |
A capital (or other large) letter. |
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Margin |
The blank space to the left, right, above, and below the text on a page. Margins may contain up to 50% of the area of a well-designed book page. |
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Marginalia |
Notes, titles, summaries, or other information in the margins of a document. |
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Matrix |
The copper block onto which the steel die for a letter was stamped. The matrix served as the mold for the face of a type or for a printing plate. |
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Markup language |
A formatting language, that includes textual instructions to the formatter, intermingled with the text to be formatted. For example, HTML & LaTeX. |
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Mechanical |
A camera-ready original, ready for reproduction by off, set printing. |
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METAFONT |
Font production language developed by Donald Knuth. |
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Metal type |
Typesetting technology prior to phototypesetting, a kind of relief printing. See letterpress, linotype and monotype. |
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Minuscule |
Archaic term for a lowercase letter, see also majuscule. |
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Modeless editor |
An editor without states (such as text versus command mode) in the user interface. |
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Modern Type Style |
Letterforms with flat serifs, abrupt and exaggerated strokes, and vertical shading. Originated by Francois Didot in the late 18th century, this style represented a casting away of the decorative baggage of the rococo era. |
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Monochrome display |
Display that presents images in black and white (or some other pair of foreground and background colours). Some monochrome displays are capable of greyscale, that is, gradations of intensity. |
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Monospaced printing |
Printing in which each letter or symbol occupies the same horizontal space. |
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Monotype |
Typesetting machine invented in 1893 by Tolbert Lanston that casts individual letters and assembles them into a block of type, following instructions punched on a paper tape. |
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Mood of type |
The subjective feeling imparted by a typeface, layout, or page of type. |
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Movable type |
What Gutenberg invented-individual letters cast on independent metal bodies, for assembly into blocks for printing. |